The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

UGA comes up short again against No. 8 Alabama,

UGA 14-11 in regular season, enters SEC Tourney seeded 10th.

- By Chip Towers

ATHENS — Not ready for prime time.

That was the main takeaway from Georgia’s admirable but losing effort against No. 8 Alabama on Saturday at Stegeman Coliseum.

The Bulldogs led by 14 points in the first half and were within a single possession with a minute to play. But it was the Crimson Tide who made all the important plays when they mattered — including a key 3-point shot with 46 seconds remaining — and the SEC regular-season champions pulled away at the end for an 89-79 victory.

“Yeah, I’m not a moral victory kind of dude,” said Geor- gia point guard Sahvir Wheeler, who logged yet another double-double with 18 points and 10 assists. “I’m always about win or lose; you either win or lose a game. We did great things to put ourselves in position to win the game. But at the end of the day we did not win the game.”

At the end of the day, the Bulldogs finished the regular season 14-11 overall and 7-11 in SEC play. They’ll enter the SEC Tournament as the No. 10 seed. Georgia will face Missouri, the No. 7 seed, at 7 p.m. Thursday in Nashville, Tennessee, and will have to win the tourna- ment championsh­ip to play beyond next week.

Alabama (21-6, 16-2) enters as the top seed.

The difference Saturday: UGA had 20 turnovers and went 13 for 23 from the freethrow line. The Crimson Tide had 22 turnovers as well and also weren’t great on free throws (13 of 20). But Alabama managed to get its act together and went 8 of 10 from 3-point range and outscored Georgia 59-43 in the second half.

Neverthele­ss, the positives both now and the future far outweighed the nega- tives for the Bulldogs. These were, after all, the conference champs and a team that had beaten them by 33 points in Tuscaloosa only three weeks ago.

“I’m disappoint­ed in the loss; there ain’t no doubt about that,” third-year coach Tom Crean said. “But I’m not discourage­d in our effort or our work. I saw some sustainabl­e growth we can take into next week.”

After Georgia led by as many 14 points in the first half and trailed by as many 10 in the second, it came down to this: Johnson was at the free-throw line with 1:13 for the second of two free throws in the midst of a late 5-0 Bulldogs run. He missed the shot, Alabama got the rebound, and 27 sec- onds later, Keon Ellis buried a 3-pointer with 46 sec- onds to play that made the score 85-79.

Toumani Camara missed on a driving layup on the other end, and the Bulldogs would miss three more shots as Alabama closed out the game at the free-throw line.

Bama’s bench outscored Georgia’s 33-24, tha n ks mainly to Jahvon Quiner- ly’s 18 points, all coming after halftime. He led five Tide players in double figures, including John Petty with 15 and Jaden Shacklefor­d with 14. Bama throttled the Bulldogs on the boards 45-32.

Georgia got 16 from Johnson, and Camara overcame foul trouble to finish with 13 points and seven rebounds.

The Bulldogs were 8 of 19 from 3 but missed seven of 11 in the second half.

But the postgame vibe was closer to encouragem­ent than dejection.

“That’s the team that won the league, so us losing by four or five, or whatever, is way better than our game last time,” Johnson said. “If we play like we closed out the game and the first half we had, if we play like that the whole game, it’d been better. … But I feel good about us going into the SEC tournament.”

Said Wheeler: “We had good spurts, good sequences in the game. … It came down to one possession with a min- ute left, and the dude hit a tough shot. We’ve just got to keep putting ourselves into those situations.”

 ?? TONY WALSH FOR THE AJC ?? Georgia’s Justin Kier heads for the basket Saturday against Alabama at Stegeman Coliseum in Athens. The Crimson Tide, SEC regular-season champions, pulled away at the end to win 89-79.
TONY WALSH FOR THE AJC Georgia’s Justin Kier heads for the basket Saturday against Alabama at Stegeman Coliseum in Athens. The Crimson Tide, SEC regular-season champions, pulled away at the end to win 89-79.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States